Prophet of Liberty: The Life and Times of Wendell PhillipsBookman Associates, 1958 - 814 psl. |
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Rezultatai 13 iš 85
478 psl.
... England , and who wrote Emerson that he had received the first money to keep him from starvation from Boston and New York , " when not a penny had been realized in England , " had no sympathy with liberty and the North . Carlyle called ...
... England , and who wrote Emerson that he had received the first money to keep him from starvation from Boston and New York , " when not a penny had been realized in England , " had no sympathy with liberty and the North . Carlyle called ...
479 psl.
... England was confronted with a huge deficit in its wheat supply . To provide the usual amount of food for the nation , it required the importation of wheat . But the European harvests were ex- ceedingly poor , and the other countries ...
... England was confronted with a huge deficit in its wheat supply . To provide the usual amount of food for the nation , it required the importation of wheat . But the European harvests were ex- ceedingly poor , and the other countries ...
618 psl.
... England has power . " The historian's lectures not only stung the Irish to the quick , but harassed his friends ... England's having conquered Ire- land , Ireland has conquered England ! She has summoned her before the bar of the ...
... England has power . " The historian's lectures not only stung the Irish to the quick , but harassed his friends ... England's having conquered Ire- land , Ireland has conquered England ! She has summoned her before the bar of the ...
Turinys
The Revolutionary Tradition | 13 |
A New England Boyhood | 18 |
Harvard Days | 26 |
Autorių teisės | |
Nerodoma skirsnių: 58
Kiti leidimai - Peržiūrėti viską
Prophet of Liberty The Life and Times of Wendell Phillips Oscar Sherwin Trumpų ištraukų rodinys - 1958 |
Pagrindiniai terminai ir frazės
Abolition Abolitionists Abraham Lincoln agitation American Anti-Slavery Society Andrew Johnson applause asked audience bill blood Boston Boston Public Library Butler called cause Charles Charles Sumner cheers Church citizens civil Congress Constitution Convention Court cried crowd Daniel O'Connell declared Democratic Douglass Dred Scott emancipation Emerson England Faneuil Hall freedom friends Fugitive Slave Garrison Governor Greeley hand hear Henry hisses History hour House Ibid Jefferson Davis John Brown Johnson justice labor lecture Liberator liberty Lincoln Manuscript letter Massachusetts meeting Mifflin millions moral nation Negro never North O'Connell orator Phillips's platform political President pulpit question Quincy reform remarked replied Senate shouted slaveholders slavery South Southern speak speech spoke Street Sumner Thaddeus Stevens Theodore Parker thing thousand tion Union United voice vols vote Washington Wendell Phillips William woman women words wrote York